s two-wheeled cart lumbers along, piled high with red
carrots as neatly arranged as cigars in a box--the driver asleep on his
seat near his swinging lantern--and the big Normandy horses taking the
way. It is late, for these carts are on their route to the early morning
market--one of the great Halles. The tired waiters are putting up the
shutters of the smaller cafes and stacking up the chairs. Now a cock
crows lustily in some neighboring yard; the majority at least of the
Latin Quarter has turned in for the night. A moment later you reach your
gate, feel instinctively for your matches. In the darkness of the court
a friendly cat rubs her head contentedly against your leg. It is the
yellow one that sleeps in the furniture factory, and you pick her up and
carry her to your studio, where, a moment later, she is crunching
gratefully the remnant of the beau maquereau left from your
dejeuner--for charity begins at home.
CHAPTER X
EXILED
Scores of men, celebrated in art and in literature, have, for a longer
or shorter period of their lives, been bohemians of the Latin Quarter.
And yet these years spent in cafes and in studios have not turned them
out into the world a devil-me-care lot of dreamers. They have all
marched and sung along the "Boul' Miche"; danced at the "Bullier";
starved, struggled, and lived in the romance of its life. It has all
been a part of their education, and a very important part too, in the
development of their several geniuses, a development which in later life
has placed them at the head of their professions. These years of
camaraderie--of a life free from all conventionalities, in daily touch
with everything about them, and untrammeled by public censure or the
petty views of prudish or narrow minds, have left them free to cut a
straight swath merrily toward the goal of their ideals, surrounded all
the while by an atmosphere of art and good-fellowship that permeates the
very air they breathe.
If a man can work at all, he can work here, for between the
working-hours he finds a life so charming, that once having lived
it he returns to it again and again, as to an old love.
How many are the romances of this student Quarter! How many hearts have
been broken or made glad! How many brave spirits have suffered and
worked on and suffered again, and at last won fame! How many have
failed! We who come with a fresh eye know nothing of all that has passed
within these quaint streets--only those
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